California’s Integrated Waste Management Board: Goodbye and Good Riddance

Shortly after taking office as California's Governor, following a tumultuous recall election in 2003, Arnold Schwarzenegger famously promised to "blow up the boxes" of state government in favor of a more streamlined governance structure.  That commitment has since largely been sacrificed on the alter of ever-contentious California politics.  But this summer's belated and painfully-negotiated California budget process has produced one major change in the state's environ...

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Should We Reengineer the Planet?

RealClimate has an interesting, detailed posting about geo-engineering as a response to climate change, mostly emphasizing the areas that would require more research before it could be seriously considered.  Here's the conclusion paragraph: The real consensus, as expressed at the National Academy conference and in the AMS statement, is that mitigation needs to be our first and overwhelming response to global warming, and that whether geoengineering can even be conside...

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Nudging Smart Growth

There are lots of problems with Sunstein and Thaler's book Nudge, but its central premise has potentially powerful applications to a host of problems.  Sunstein and Thaler posit that in many policy areas, "choice architects" can  help people make better choices without impairing their actual ability to make that choice -- a philosophy that they call (misleadingly but ingeniously) "libertarian paternalism." The land use and smart growth area could serve as a fruitful ...

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Looking Back: Three Decades of an Environmental Law Casebook

Ann Carlson and I have just sent West the manuscript for the 8th edition of"Environmenal Law: Cases and Materials." (The third member of our author team, Jody Freeman, didn't participate in the revision because of her White House duties.)  Some thirty years ago, Roger Findley and I started work on the first edition of the book.  This seems like an apt time for some retrospective reflection.  What has changed in thirty years (apart from my graying hair)? Not as much ...

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China, Congress and Climate Change

This week brings two related and interesting stories on the prospects for domestic climate change legislation and progress in Copenhagen when the international community gathers in December to try to hammer out a post-Kyoto treaty on climate change.  The first is that China's top climate negotiator is "optimistic" that the international community will reach agreement on a new treaty in Copenhagen.  It's unclear what the basis for his optimism is given that he also rei...

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Report from the Field: Thailand

I'm writing this post from Thailand, where I've been attending a conference of the Thai judiciary.  My presentation was on developments in U.S. climate law. It's been a very interesting trip. Thailand faces some serious environmental issues, which you can't help noticing just from breathing the air in Bangok.  The traffic jams, as seen on the left, are world famous.  Environmental protection has not yet caught up with growth. As the World Bank says: Rapid industria...

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Cows and Climate – Putting All of That Waste To Work

In many situations, public policies supporting greenhouse gas reduction also support other environmental goals.  But sometimes, different environmental policies bump up against each other.  It is left for enlightened public officials to sort it all out.  Here is a link to comments recently filed with the California Energy Commission by the Center for Law, Energy, & the Environment pointing out one of the bumps.  The subject is the laudable goal of generating elec...

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The need for, and challenges of, climate adaptation

When it comes to climate change, lawyers and policymakers (and scientists too) have been guilty of emphasizing greenhouse gas emission reduction, almost to the exclusion of everything else. Adapting to climate change has taken a distant back seat, even as it has become increasingly clear that the world is already committed to some pretty dramatic changes. That's beginning to change. Earlier this summer, the U.S. Global Change Research Program issued a major report det...

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Noah’s Art

Having just made my first trip to the Art Institute in Chicago, I was primed for this feature in Grist on the state of climate art.  If one can judge a movement by its artists, it seems we still have a fair ways to go--though I like this Venus. Also like this slideshow of climate activists around the world....

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Trade laws and climate change regulation

Co-authored by Jesse Swanhuyser, UCLA Law class of 2011, formerly a fair trade advocate in California and Washington D.C. A prior version of this article first appeared in the Los Angeles Daily Journal, on July 23. As discussed in other posts on this blog, last month was particularly challenging for those working toward national and international climate agreements. At a summit in Italy, G8 members failed to resolve key sticking points and developing nations refuse...

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